User talk:Melville Y. Stewart

Article Melville Y. Stewart
You should wait for others to write an article about subjects in which you are personally involved. This applies to articles about you, your achievements, your band, your business, your publications, your website, your relatives, and any other possible conflict of interest.

Creating an article about yourself is strongly discouraged. If you create such an article, it might be listed on articles for deletion. Deletion is not certain, but many feel strongly that you should not start articles about yourself. This is because independent creation encourages independent validation of both significance and verifiability. All edits to articles must conform to No original research, Neutral point of view, and Verifiability.

If you are not "notable" under Wikipedia guidelines, creating an article about yourself may violate the policy that Wikipedia is not a personal webspace provider and would thus qualify for speedy deletion. If your achievements, etc., are verifiable and genuinely notable, and thus suitable for inclusion in Wikipedia, someone else will probably create an article about you sooner or later. (See Wikipedians with articles.)  76.102.12.35 (talk) 22:09, 14 February 2010 (UTC)

Do not remove tags from an article without explanation or fixing the issue. Doing such constitutes as vandalism. Freikorp (talk) 05:28, 22 February 2010 (UTC)

It should of been obvious, but you yourself cannot fix the issue that "a major contributor appears to have a close connection with the subject", you need to wait for someone else to take enough interest in your work to re-write the article. This is one of the main reasons writing an article about yourself is strongly discouraged. Please read the following:
 * Conflict of interest
 * Wikipedia is not the place to post your résumé
 * An article about yourself is nothing to be proud of

Freikorp (talk) 00:08, 27 February 2010 (UTC)

March 2010
You have been blocked indefinitely from editing for edit warring using IPs to remove maintenance tags despite repeated warnings, editing disruptively with a conflict of interest, and being here only to promote yourself. If you believe this block is unjustified, you may contest this block by adding the text below, but you should read our guide to appealing blocks first. Tim Song (talk) 21:00, 27 March 2010 (UTC)

== (Melville Y. Stewart (talk) 20:33, 2 April 2013 (UTC)). This is Melville Y. Stewart. I have not tried to do any editing of my site, Melville Y. Stewart for several years, so I don't know why I was blocked. I want to enter the following article for a friend teaching in Liberia, Africa: ==

Bruce Robert Reichenbach is an American philosopher and Professor Emeritus at Augsburg College in Minneapolis, Minnesota, where he taught for 43 years. He was also a visiting professor at Juniata College; Morija Theological Seminary, Lesotho; Daystar University, Kenya; United International College, China; ABC University, Liberia. He has published numerous journal articles, books, and book chapters addressing issues in philosophy of religion and ethics. Reichenbach was born in 1943 in New York City and married Sharon Harvie in 1965. He received his B.A. from Wheaton College, and his M.A. and Ph.D. in philosophy from Northwestern University (1968). His book Epistemic Obligations (2012) challenges current responses to the questions whether we have a right to believe what we want and whether and to what extent we have control over our beliefs. His other books provide philosophical studies of the law of karma, the cosmological argument for God’s existence, the problem of evil, and the relation of religion and science. Selected Publications A selection of his books includes • 1972, The Cosmological Argument: A Reassessment • 1978, Is Man the Phoenix? A Study of Immortality • 1982, Evil and Good God • 1990, The Law of Karma: A Philosophical Study • 1995, On Behalf of God: A Christian Ethic for Biology (co-author) • 2001, Introduction to Critical Thinking • 2012, Epistemic Obligations: Truth, Individualism, and the Limits of Belief • 2013, Reason and Religious Belief, 5th ed. (co-author) (Melville Y. Stewart (talk) 20:33, 2 April 2013 (UTC)). Bruce Reichenbach is a member of the Society of Christian Philosophers, and he is author of the books listed above. I have known him my entire professional career. As for sources, I have copies of his books, and have invited him to symposia in Russia and China. Melville Y. Stewart